Anybody got the krak card yet? #kraken #krakcard
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Vibes 😎 4 - trying to break free
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Apple JUST quietly announced something that’s a lot BIGGER than it looks: "the Mini Apps Partner Program"
Apple is admitting that the future of software is embedded, lightweight, vertical mini-apps distributed inside bigger app
For founders who want to make $$ building apps:
1. Apple just legitimized the “superapp” model for the West.
China has WeChat mini-programs. India has PhonePe Switch. The West has… nothing. Apple just opened the door. You can now run HTML/JS mini-apps inside a native host and earn 85% on qualifying purchases. That’s Apple-sanctioned platform piggybacking.
2. Distribution arbitrage becomes real again.
You don’t need to convince users to download your app. Just partner with a host app and drop in a mini-app. This is a cheat code for early traction. Think: travel apps hosting niche tools, fitness apps hosting mini workouts, marketplaces hosting micro-utilities.
3. Apple is creating a new economy layer: “embedded SaaS.”
Imagine: CRM mini-apps inside vertical tools. Math solver mini-apps inside education apps. Calendar mini-apps inside productivity apps. The TAM for tools that don’t need standalone installs just went vertical.
4. Developers get an 85% revenue share.
This is Apple basically saying: “We want this ecosystem to grow, and we’re willing to cut our take rate.” When Apple lowers its cut, I pay attention because they see a platform shift coming.
5. AI makes this 10× more important.
LLM-powered micro-apps (calculators, planners, agents, coaches, niche utilities) are tiny by design. They’re perfect mini-apps. Apple just created infrastructure for AI-native micro utilities to live inside bigger apps with built-in commerce.
6. Host apps become new “distribution landlords.”
If you own an app with traffic, you become a platform. You can host mini-apps, take a cut, and build a developer ecosystem around you.
It’s a new monetization model for existing apps with audiences.
7. This unlocks a wave of second-order opportunities.
- Agencies helping apps become mini-app hosts
- Mini-app dev shops
- “Shopify for mini-apps” toolkits
- Mini-app marketplaces
- Analytics for mini-app performance
- Discovery engines for mini-apps
TLDR;
Apple just turned every high-traffic app into a potential superapp and every indie developer into a potential platform partner.
The App Store is becoming modular, composable, and layered. The next decade of consumer apps will look less like standalone products and more like ecosystems stitched together with mini-apps.
This is quietly one of the biggest distribution unlocks in years.


A chemist froze himself at -273.15°C, everyone said he was crazy but he was 0K.
in a post-AGI world, people will simply get used to the fact that computers can solve cognitive problems quickly, and beat us in any cognitive domain, just like we're used to computers multiplying large numbers quickly now, or kicking our asses in chess and go. software and math will lose all their scarcity.
"pls create a MMORPG that is like Zelda: Breath of the Wild but with Pokémon instead, let me fly around the world as a Charizard and dive on the water like a Gyarados. give me an executable that I can send to my friends and we'll all be connected to the same world"
you press a button and, 3 minutes later, done
I doubt that won't work by 2027
"pls create a blockchain exactly like Bitcoin except it uses quantum resistant signatures like Lamport, and you can deploy smart contracts in a Lean-like language, and contracts are only accepted if they're formally verified to be correct w.r.t the following specs..."
you press a button and done, you have a hack-proof chain
"in three space dimensions and time, given an initial velocity field, there exists a vector velocity and a scalar pressure field, which are both smooth and globally defined, that solve the Navier–Stokes equations"
you press a button, and done, you get a solution
math is fundamentally easy, and this will break some ppl's worldviews. currently, math seems mystically hard, like chess once was, because we're are animals that struggle with it, only a few of us are capable of adding fractions, let alone working on the edge, so hard problems stand for a long time unsolved, we praise our geniuses.
but it isn't
once computers are doing it, that won't be a thing anymore. theorem proving will be as trivial as multiplying large numbers. the "uh duh but godel?" folk will still be confused. and computers will come up with incredibly simple, clean Lean proofs for impossibly hard problems. and mathematicians will yell that it is just some trick to satisfy the checker, that it isn't real math if we can't understand it. but then we'll ask the AI and it will kindly reveal the nature of a surprisingly clever mathematical structure that is so alien for our brains to come up with
and life will go on
automation will increase 100-fold
food and goods will be abundant
the price of everything will crash
other than things that can't be copied
like human time and attention
which will be on all time high
and humans will still play chess
and humans will still write software
and humans will still do math
and we'll dance, play sports and love
like we always did
for the love of it
software and math will lose their scarcity
computers will be truly general solvers
and we'll get used to it faster than you think
and life will go on
Source: 

X (formerly Twitter)
Taelin (@VictorTaelin) on X
in a post-AGI world, people will simply get used to the fact that computers can solve cognitive problems quickly, and beat us in any cognitive doma...